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    Video shows armed thieves ransack California jewelry store

    02:21
  • Victim speaks out after arrests made in string of targeted burglaries in Washington state

    01:45
  • Asian Americans in New York say they were targeted over race, study shows

    07:50
  • Why a Chinese American family is donating $5M to Black college students

    03:16
  • California man arrested after sucker-punching man pushing stroller

    00:27
  • Video shows racist assault on Boston train

    01:38
  • Hate crime arrest follows attack on Seattle's Wing Luke Museum

    01:27
  • Broadway musical makes history with all-Filipino cast

    05:28
  • California set to become first state to ban caste discrimination

    03:14
  • New York mother killed, two children wounded in hammer attack

    02:05
  • Sahil Kapur: Asian American vote will be decisive in battleground states

    07:46
  • California company Lumentum accused of anti-Asian bias

    01:58
  • Harvard introduces course in Tagalog for the first time

    06:26
  • 12-year-old graduates college in California with five degrees

    01:59
  • Exploring Indian culture through cuisine

    04:01
  • AAPI businesses receiving support from venture capitalists

    03:29
  • Recognizing Asian American standouts in pro-sports where few share their heritage

    04:31
  • L.A. food truck serving up Korean staples with a twist

    03:35
  • Food truck in L.A. explores Indonesian culture through cuisine

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  • White House recognizes AAPI Heritage Month

    02:50

Netflix's 'Always Be My Maybe' is a rom-com with a 'story worth telling'

04:53

The stars of Netflix's "Always Be My Maybe" (Ali Wong, Randall Park, Daniel Dae Kim, and Michelle Buteau) and director Nahnatchka Khan sit down with NBC Asian America to talk about creating the romantic comedy and what it means to represent diversity on screen.